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1
  • The American health care delivery system is in
    need of fundamental change.
  • Crossing the Quality Chasm, IOM 2001

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3
Errors of Commission
  • Hospitals Tens of thousands die each year due
    to medical errors.
  • IOM, 1999
  • Ambulatory settings 13.8 preventable ADEs per
    1000 person years in ambulatory settings.
  • Gurwitz, 2003
  • Nursing homes 116 preventable ADEs per 1000
    resident years in nursing homes.
  • Gurwitz, 2000

4
Errors of Omission
  • U.S. adults receive about half of recommended
    care.
  • McGlynn, 2003
  • An estimated 57,000 Americans die because they do
    not receive appropriate care.
  • NCQA,2003

5
Crossing the Quality Chasm
  • For decades, the needs of the American public
    have been shifting from acute episodic care to
    care for chronic conditions. Yet there remains a
    dearth of clinical programs with the
    infrastructure required to provide the full
    complement of services to people with chronic
    conditions.
  • Crossing the Quality Chasm, IOM 2001

6
Quality Health Care System is . . .
  • Safe patients should not be harmed by the care
    that is intended to help them
  • Effective care that is based on the use of
    systematically acquired evidence
  • Patient Centered responsive to the needs,
    values and preferences individual patients
  • Timely a quality process that flows smoothly
  • Efficient resources used to get the best value
    for money spent
  • Equitable all individuals should expect to be
    treated fairly
  • Crossing the Quality Chasm, IOM 2001

7
  • The longest journey begins with a single step
  • Chinese proverb

8
20 Priority Areas
  • Care Coordination
  • Self-management/health literacy
  • Asthma
  • Cancer screening-colorectal and cervical
  • Children with special needs
  • Diabetes
  • End of Life (advanced organ system failure)
  • Frailty
  • Hypertension
  • Immunization
  • Ischemic heart disease

Priority Areas for National Action, IOM 2001
9
20 Priority Areas
  • Major Depression
  • Medication management
  • Nosocomial Infections
  • Pain control
  • Pregnancy and childbirth
  • Severe and persistent mental illness
  • Stroke
  • Tobacco dependence
  • Obesity

Priority Areas for National Action, IOM 2001
10
Additional Areas of Strategic Importance
  • Health Professions Education and Training
  • Creating the knowledge (evidence) necessary to
    deliver effective care
  • Aligning incentives for patients, health
    professionals to make quality choices

11
  • Role of Clinicians
  • Provide patient centered care
  • Work in interdisciplinary care
  • Employ evidence-based practice
  • Apply quality improvement
  • Utilize informatics
  • Health Professions Education, IOM 2004

12
Changing the Toxic Environment
  • Redesign of benefit, payment and performance
  • Improvement policies

13
  • Expanding Knowledge Base
  • Current practice depends upon the clinical
    decision-making capacity and reliability of
    autonomous individual practitioners, for classes
    of problems that routinely exceed the bounds of
    unaided human cognition.
  • Daniel R. Masys, M.D.
  • 2001 IOM Annual Meeting

14
Information Technology
  • IT has enormous potential to transform health
    care, especially care for those with chronic
    illnesses.
  • Key Elements of an IT Infrastructure
  • Web-based knowledge resources
  • computer-based records
  • secure platform
  • decision support systems

15
Information Technology Offers Substantial
Benefits
  • Reduce Medication errors by up to 83
  • Bates and Gawande, 2003
  • Starting to see similar benefits for lab,
    radiology path, nursing and supply orders
  • Schuster 2003, Wang, 2002
  • Sanders and Miller, 2001, Schieff, 2003

16
Decision Support
  • Prompts and reminders increase use of preventive
    services
  • Balas 2000, Shea 1996
  • Improve drug dosing, selection and screening for
    interactions
  • Abookire 2000, Evans 1998, Hunt 1998
  • Improve compliance with practice guidelines
  • Starmer 2000, Morris 2003, Tang 1999
  • Tx of hospital acquired infections
  • Evans 1986

17
Improved Communication
  • Improve communication between care team and care
    partners
  • Bates 2003, Schmidt 2002
  • Improve communication between patients and
    clinicians, promote continuity, timely
    interventions
  • Kuebler 2000, Liederman 2003, Worth 1997

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20
Additional Issues for Quality Careand Disease
Management
  • Uninsurance
  • Health Literacy
  • Unequal Treatment

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22
The Problem of Uninsurance
  • Uninsured adults living with chronic diseases
    are less likely to receive appropriate care to
    manage their health conditions than are those who
    have health insurance.
  • Care Without Coverage, IOM 2002

23
Diabetes
  • 25 of adults with diabetes who are uninsured for
    at least a year have not had a routine exam
    within the past 2 years, compared with 5 of
    those who had insurance.
  • Uninsured adults with diabetes are less likely to
    receive recommended services such as foot exams
    or dilated eye exams.
  • Lacking health insurance for longer periods
    increases the risk of inadequate care for this
    condition and can lead to uncontrolled blood
    sugar levels, which, over time, put diabetics at
    risk for additional chronic disease and
    disability.
  • Care Without Coverage, IOM 2002

24
Hypertension and Cardiovascular Disease
  • Uninsured adults with hypertension or high blood
    cholesterol have diminished access to care, are
    less likely to be screened, are less likely to
    take prescription medication if diagnosed, and
    experience worse health outcomes.
  • Adults with hypertension who lost health coverage
    had poorer blood pressure control than those who
    remained insured.
  • Care Without Coverage, IOM 2002

25
What is Health Literacy?
The degree to which individuals have the capacity
to obtain, process, and understand basic health
information and services needed to make
appropriate health decisions
Healthy People 2010, HHS 2000
26
The Challenge of Health Illiteracy
90 million American adults may lack the needed
literacy skills to effectively use the U.S.
health system
Total US Population (2002)
NALS level 1 - 2 NALS level 3 - 5 Estimated
from 1992 National Adult Literacy Survey
Healthy People 2010, HHS 2000
27
Limited health literacy affects health knowledge
and behavior
  • Adults with limited health literacy
  • Have less knowledge of disease management and of
    health-promoting behaviors
  • Report poorer health status
  • Are less likely to use preventive services
  • Healthy People 2010, HHS 2000

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